Consents Us Final Report Phase I April2009
Transcript of Consents Us Final Report Phase I April2009
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General Issues
ERIK PAREDIS,MAARTEN CRIVITSCDO,UGENTTOM BAULER,EMILIE MUTOMBO,EDWIN ZACCAI IGEAT,ULB
PAUL-MARIE BOULANGER,ANNE-LAURENCE LEFINIDD
APRIL2009
SCIENCE FOR A SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT
(SSD)
FINAL REPORT PHASE I
CONSTRUCTION OF SCENARIOS AND EXPLORATION OF
TRANSITION PATHWAYS FORSUSTAINABLE CONSUMPTION
PATTERNS
CONSENTSUS
SD/TA/03A
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Paredis, Erik, Crivits, Maarten, Bauler, Tom, Mutombo, Emilie, Boulanger, Paul-Marie, Lefin, Anne-
Laurence, Construction of Scenarios and Exploration of Transition Pathways for Sustainable
Consumption Patterns, Final Report Phase 1. Brussels : Belgian Science Policy 200991 p.(Research Programme Science for a Sustainable Development)
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TABLE OF CONTENT
TABLE OF CONTENT ......................................................................................................................... 3List of Tables ....................................................................................................................................................... 5
INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................. 6
I. TWO STRANDS OF RESEARCH ............................................................................................. 8
A. Addressing scenarios ............................................................................................................ 8
1. Categorizing scenarios: a historical perspective ........................................................................ 8
2. A theoretical framework .......................................................................................................... 10
3. Scenarios: between simplification and complexification ......................................................... 13
B. Addressing sustainable consumption .................................................................................. 15
II. SCENARIOS FOR SUSTAINABLE CONSUMPTION: CONSENTSUS METHODOLOGY
AND RESULTS. ................................................................................................................................. 17
A. From main discourses on sustainable consumption to food consumption scenarios ............. 17
1. Decomposition analysis to frame sustainable consumption strategies ................................... 17
Eco-efficiency ....................................................................................................................... 18
De-commmodification ......................................................................................................... 19
Sufficiency ............................................................................................................................ 19
2. From sustainable consumption strategies to scenarios ........................................................... 20
A brief overview of the scenario construction process: ...................................................... 20
Scenario WORKSHOPS ......................................................................................................... 20
a. Introductory meeting .............................................................................................. 21
b. First scenario workshop on the 22nd of May 2008 ................................................ 21
c. In Between two workshops desktop work........................................................... 22
d. Second scenario workshop on the 19th of June ..................................................... 22
e. After the Scenario workshops the narratives ...................................................... 23
f. Feedback meeting ................................................................................................... 23
3. Three scenarios of sustainable food consumption .................................................................. 23
4. An analysis of the scenarios: three Consumer perspectives .................................................... 28
a. Mainstream driver .................................................................................................. 30
b. Consumer participation .......................................................................................... 31c. Handling conflicting values ..................................................................................... 31
d. Consumer Trust ....................................................................................................... 32
e. Consumer Knowledge ............................................................................................. 32
A. Towards integrated strategies: Q methodology ................................................................. 34
Introduction : What is Q methodology ? ................................................................................. 34
1. Construction of communication concourse ............................................................................. 35
2. Selection of the Q sample ........................................................................................................ 36
3. Participants selection (P sample) ............................................................................................. 37
4. Execution of the Q sort............................................................................................................. 37
5. Statistical analysis..................................................................................................................... 38
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6. Q Methodology analysis of the Consentsus Q Sorts ............................................................ 39
a. Varimax rotation ..................................................................................................... 39
b. Judgmental rotation (1) : the extreme positions ................................................ 41
c. Judgmental rotation (2): the mixed positions .................................................... 457. Conclusions............................................................................................................................... 48
III. REFLECTIONS AND CONCLUSIONS .............................................................................. 50
A. The Relativity of Consumption ............................................................................................ 50
B. The Specificity of Consumption ........................................................................................... 52
1. Analysing consumption along the scenario building blocks..................................................... 52
Future-oriented thinking ...................................................................................................... 52
Collecting and integrating information ................................................................................ 53
System thinking .................................................................................................................... 53Story-like approach .............................................................................................................. 54
Dialogue interface ................................................................................................................ 55
2. The outcomes of the consentsus scenario exercise ................................................................. 55
Learning ............................................................................................................................... 56
Strategizing .......................................................................................................................... 57
IV. BIBLIOGRAPHY .................................................................................................................. 59
SCENARIO ANNEXES ...................................................................................................................... 65
A. Images of three worlds of food consumption ........................................................................ 66
1. An example of eco-efficient world in 2050 ................................................................. 66
2. An example of decommodified world in 2050 ............................................................ 68
3. An example of sufficient world in 2050 ....................................................................... 70
B. Scenarios (Narratives).............................................................................................................. 72
1. Eco-efficiency scenario (French).............................................................................. 72
2. Decommodification Scenario (French) ........................................................................ 77
3. Sufficiency Scenario (Flemish) ..................................................................................... 83
ANNEXES ........................................................................................................................................... 89
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LIST OF TABLES
Table 1: 1stWorkshop 22ndMay _______________________________________________________________ 22Table 2: 2
ndWorkshop 19
nd June _______________________________________________________________ 22
Table 3: General Drivers of the Scenarios ________________________________________________________ 24
Table 4: The Instances Of Food Consumption _____________________________________________________ 27
Table 5: Three Consumer Perspectives __________________________________________________________ 29
Table 6: Q sample design principle _____________________________________________________________ 36
Table 7: Q study sorting scheme _______________________________________________________________ 38
Table 8: Factors scores of three factors extracted after Varimax rotation ______________________________ 40
Table 9: Factor scores for three factors extracted after a first judgmental rotation ______________________ 42
Table 10: Elements of disagreement (1) _________________________________________________________ 43
Table 11: Elements of consensus (1) ____________________________________________________________ 45
Table 12: judgmental rotation (2) ______________________________________________________________ 46
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INTRODUCTION
Within the policy and science community concerned with sustainable development, it is expected that
the first decades of the 21st century are a turning point for the world community. Widespread poverty,growing inequalities between and within countries, pressures on vital ecosystems and ecosystem
services combined with an intensive process of economic and cultural globalization present enormous
challenges for a world which aims towards sustainable development. The resolution of these societal
and environmental problems is not only complex today because they are globally interlinked, but also
because uncertainties and the apparent urgency of the stakes generate policy situations where
traditional decision-supporting tools reach many of their limits. Policy-makers, civil society
organizations and scientists alike are thus looking for new and refined sets of techniques, tools and
instruments which help in guiding policy towards meeting sustainable development objectives.
Internationally, scenarios and scenario planning are thought to be such tools, notably because they are
said to have the potential to generate thinking and creativity about sustainable development and
sustainable development policies. According to some authors, scenario exercises are meant to support
more informed decision-making by offering insight into uncertainties and the consequences of
current actions (Carpenter et al, 2005). Their use is typically recommended in situations where
complexity, uncertainty, long-time horizons, cross-scale and cross-sector interactions are the rule
(Alcamo et al. 2005). Sustainable issues have exactly these characteristics (Kates, et al, 2000;
Boulanger, Brchet, 2004). More specifically, in participative approaches aiming at managing
systemic transitions towards more sustainable patterns, scenario building is a central tool used to
generate future visions of the system at hand and foster interactive processes.
The Consentsus project (CONstruction of ScENarios and exploration of Transition pathways forSUStainable consumption patterns) is settled within this context. More precisely, during its first
phase (2007-2008), the project investigates and experiments how scenarios can be developed, applied
and validated within the issue-domain of sustainable consumption. While the first phase focused on
the construction of consumption scenarios, the second phase (2009-2010) studies the potential of
new perspectives and governance approach to draw insights in terms of potential pathways towards
sustainable consumption patterns in Belgium through system innovation, transition theory and
approaches like the Transition Management. The research questions leading this first phase thus aims
at exploring the specificity of addressing the issue-domain of consumption through scenarios, in the
wider context of scenarios for transition management and system innovation. In other words, is the
scenario approach a relevant tool to be used in TM-like planning process when focusing on the
specific issue of changing consumption patterns?To answer this question, two strands of research have been worked out. A first objective was to
appraise the characteristics of scenarios. A theoretical analysis of the scenario field in terms of
methodology, content and use of scenarios yielded their underlying mechanics, potential outcomes and
factors of use. A second objective was to implement during the project a scenario exercise in order to
gain insights on the tools mechanics and to identify a series of pathways towards sustainable
consumption patterns. Concretely and on a case-study approach, Consentsus explored a specific theme
within the manifold consumption issues, namely food consumption. The research was performed by a
team of researchers coming from three different institutions with different backgrounds, even if with
similar focus of research: Centrum voor Duurzame Ontwikkeling (CDO, UGent), Centre d'Etudes du
Dveloppement Durable (CEDD, IGEAT - ULB), Institut pour un Dveloppement Durable (IDD).
This report is structured in three parts:
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The first part introduces the two main strands of the research project: scenarios and consumption. A
first section (I.A) provides some structure to the scenario field through a historical overview, the
presentation of a theoretical framework providing insights in terms of scenario mechanics and uses
and conclusions on the theoretical potential of scenarios as SD-policy tool. In the second section (I.B),
the concept of consumption is approached.
Part II presents the methodology and results of the Consentsus scenario process. The first section
reports on the scenario methodology as such (II.A). Three discourses, or strategies, of sustainable
consumption have been highlighted through decomposition analysis (II.A.1) and used to frame the
construction process (II.A.2), subsequently resulting in three scenarios presented through a
comparative table (II.A.3) and through an analysis of the different consumer perspectives related to the
three scenarios which had been developed (II.A.4).
The second section presents the methodology and results of the integration of these three strategies
through a statistical methodology called Q Methodology, i.e. in order to get closer to a single
sustainable consumption pathway. This approach is prescribing the identification of a specificdiscourse (II.B.1), decomposed into statements (II.B.2), which are then ranked by a sample of
participants (II.B.3 and 4). Q methodology allows to gain insight on the diversity of sub-discourses
operant in the sample (II.B.5, 6 and 7) and allows to surface elements of consensus and dissensus
across the three discourses of sustainable consumption patterns, i.e. the 3 strategies/scenarios
developed.
Part III draws reflections and conclusions on the relativity of consumption with regard to the diversity
of consumers perspectives (III.A) and on the specificity of consumption as study topic (III.B) through
the analysis of the Consentsus scenario exercise.
The different Working Papers, on which this final report is based, are developing further each of theparticular research strands, and can be consulted and downloaded from the website of the Belgian
Science Policy (www.belspo.be/FEDRA) and from the website of the research project
(http://consentsus-project.pbwiki.com/).
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I. TWO STRANDS OF RESEARCH
The Consentsusprojects first phase aims at exploring the socio-political potential of scenarios in the
realms of SD-policies. In order not to remain at a theoretical level, the scenario tool was applied to theissue of sustainable consumption. Before focusing on the methodology of the developed sustainable
consumption scenarios, the next sections present a synthesis of the state of the art of the scenario field
and an introduction to the consumption field.
A. ADDRESSING SCENARIOS
The next section is an introduction to the scenario field leading also towards a general overview of the
diversity of the field (I.A.1); second, a theoretical framework synthesizes the literature on scenario
mechanics and uses (I.A.2); and finally, conclusions are drawn from this theoretical analysis with
regard to the potentials which scenario exercises could develop as SD tool (I.A.3).
1. CATEGORIZING SCENARIOS: A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
The term scenario itself is introduced by Kahn in 1960. For him and other early scenario developers
such as Wiener, scenarios denote descriptions of future courses of events, sequences of developments,
often highlighting key events, decisions, or turning points. Scenarios also include descriptions of final
states, future sets of circumstances, i.e. images or visions. In this project, a broad understanding has
been endorsed, defining scenarios as logical sequences of events and/or images of the future,
highlighting causal processes leading the evolution of socio-ecological systems; they are myths about
the future based on different worldviews.
According to Marien (2002), the scenario field can be characterized as a very fuzzy multi-field ofdisconnected bits-and-pieces. Indeed, the term scenario encompasses a variety of definitions,
methods and operationalisations. This diversity was particularly observable when analyzing eight
scenario exercises in terms of their method, content and modes of future thinking along a reading
grid containing 20 points of entry (see Annex 3, Goeminne, Mutombo, 2007).
From a methodological point of view, it is possible to categorize scenarios through a set of
dichotomies: inductive or deductive methods, diachronic or synchronic scenarios, system thinking
enhancing or narrative developing, qualitative or quantitative, expert driven or stakeholder oriented...
These different options can be complementary but also conflicting: tensions occur between conceiving
scenarios as a product, i.e. as a final set of scenarios (with e.g. an emphasis on integrating hard facts),
and conceiving scenarios as a process, i.e. as a social experience with a focus on the way of thinking
the futures. More structured scenario methods can also be used, which aim at linking both genericapproaches; like the axes-technique, the morphological analysis, the backcasting approach, etc.
Further, guidelines like the five step process1
of Schwartz (diffused by the GBN Network) provide a
basic guidance whatever the chosen approach.
In terms ofcontent analysis, many key parameters structure scenarios, depending on the main interest
of the scenario developers: temporal horizon, addressed thematic issues, main drivers, internal
dynamics, etc. The variety of these parameters and their translation into the exercises increases the
fuzziness of the field rather than structure it.
Generically, scenarios are structured along the categories ofprobable,possible andpreferable futures
(Marien, 2002). These three different future approaches provide answers to three questions one may
11. Decision focus; 2. Key factors; 3. Pre-determined elements and uncertainties; 4. Selecting the scenario logics
- or scenario plots; 5. Fleshing out (Ogilvy and Schwartz, 2004)
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ask about the future: What will happen?, What can happen? and How can a specific target be
reached? (Brjeson et al., 2006). These three questions match three modes of future -thinking: the
predictive, the explorative, and the normative modes of thinking (Dreborg, 2004). However,
contemporary scenario exercises are necessarily hybrids where choices of modes of thinking,
methodology and content are guided by the particular needs of the scenario builders and potential
users.
A brief overview of concrete practices and their evolution sheds another light on the field of scenarios
since the end of the Second World War, when studying the future with the aim of informing debate
and decision-making appeared. Three bifurcation points are apparent in the evolution of the field:
1. During the Cold War, future-oriented approaches evolved from mere forecasting methods deeply
relying on techniques of probability estimations, to scenario techniques as such, as developed
prominently by Herman Kahn (initially at the Rand Corporation, USA) based on the progress in
computer simulation and the rising era of expertise (see among others Bradfield et al, 2005).
Despite a first move away from the traditional one future, one best solution, and in a context of
economic reconstruction (in Europe) and of industrial development in general, scenarios werefocusing on the generation of feasible and surprise-free futures; they were heavily quantified
exercises which were mainly forecast-oriented.
2. With the oil shocks of the seventies, the uncertain business context led to the development of
multiple strategic scenarios focusing on exploration and discontinuities, on dynamic interactions
between parameters and leading towards the development of a broad range of futures (Sondeijker,
2006, p.23) rather than on final end states. With the famous example of Shell, scenarios started to
imply creativity and imagination for strategic learning, they wanted to foster anticipation and
adaptation capacity in a rapidly changing world. In parallel, the failure of the Meadows&Meadows
report (Club of Rome, 1972) in terms of accurate predictions led during the 1980s to a gradual loss
of faith in quantitative extrapolations methods based on modelling (Sondeijker, 2006, p.23);
simultaneously, Limits to growth also showed the capacity of scenario-based initiatives togenerate societal debate on global long term visions.
3. Following the relative failure of the World 3 model previsions (used for the
Meadows&Meadows report), a double move (Bouvier) within scenario practices emerged, with,
on the one hand, the rehabilitation of the global scale, particularly fostered by the raise of the
sustainable development discourse, starting with the Brundtland report (1987) and the Rio Summit
(1992) and on the other hand, a burst of scenario exercises around sectoral and thematic issues,
with among others the success of technological foresight and local territorial development
scenarios in the nineties.
The scenario field is still evolving. Indeed, the exploration of the scenario field and the analysis of
several case studies highlight that today three types of scenario exercises (and as much hybrids) are to
be found:
- Scenarios focusing on SD issues and themes such as energy, biodiversity, water provision, and
climate change. They are mainly expert-driven scenarios and rely on quantitative data and
modelling techniques. The emblematic example of the IPCC scenarios stands for this type.
- Global and transversal scenarios which are explicitly normative and SD-oriented. These visions of
the future explicitly address the question of the alternatives to Business As Usual scenarios and
focus on sketching the nature of change (incremental, transformational, etc.); e.g. the Global
Scenario Group publications.
- Local and context-bound participative scenarios, organized by local authorities or local
stakeholder platforms, focusing on the potentials deriving from the emergence of a (sustainable)
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development for a specific territory, region, city or community, or on specific sectoral, cultural ...
issues, aiming at developing local projects supported by citizens.
2. A THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
The previous section has pointed out the difficultly to clearly delineate the scenario field. Based on a
review of the scenario-oriented literature, the following theoretical framework synthesizes the main
characteristics of scenario exercises and highlights their mechanics and uses (see also Annex 4,
Mutombo, Bauler, 2008).
Beyond the chosen methods and processes, scenario exercises rely schematically on a few central building
blocks, which define the generic characteristics and modes of thinking of a given scenario exercise.
While the focus on one or the other of these characteristics is varying across scenario exercises, these
building blocks encompass the variety of realities of the scenario domain. Five distinct characteristics are
identified: Future-oriented thinking, Collecting and integrating information, System thinking, Story-
like approach,Dialogue interface.
One of the principal characteristics of scenario exercises is obviously that they address the future, and
specifically in SD oriented scenarios, they are oriented towards the long term future. Hence one of
their main specificities is the future-oriented and reflexive perspective which is initiated to frame the
whole process of thinking and debating. Beyond the three modes of thinking (i.e. predictive,
explorative, normative), the interest of scenarios is that they elaborate on multiple futures which tends
not to address opposing points of view, but to take into consideration parallel, equivalent perspectives
(Selin, 2006). Those perspectives in turn tend not to be solely defined by current knowledge and
individual interests, because the long term horizon highlights uncertainties and blurs the distribution of
the potential impacts of current actions (Voss et al, 2006, p.184). As a consequence, in a scenario
brainstorming, there is no right or wrong statement and people are freer to expose their ideas,including perspectives which are labelled as divergent, extravagant, etc. It is this inherent unusual
setting implicit in scenario exercises (blurred stakes due to the temporal horizon, and blurred norms
due to the multiplicity of possibilities) which is said to foster an open minded and reflexive stance
during the scenario construction processes.
A second characteristic of scenarios is related to treatment of information. Not every future-oriented
reflection should be labelled scenarios. Beyond mere imagination, scenarios have a pretention
towards scientificity. Concretely, to simulate future evolutions implies not only to gather a
considerable amount of information and parameters, and to devote some energy to their validation,
but necessitates integrating these strains of (largely) non-related information in order to construct a
robust picture of the studied system.
Thirdly, contemporary scenario exercises are oriented towards systemic thinking, through computer-
based modelling, but also verbal or iconic models. Of course, the scenario images gain in precision
when elaborated along systemic approaches which facilitates to identify the relevant variables and
their interrelations, to map potential multidirectional causes and effect chains as well as to reflect on
the complex interrelations within and between (sub-)systems (Raskin et al, 2005, p.39). Scenarios are
meant to allow an integrated overview of the studied system and are an opportunity to strive against
the modernist tendency to fragment reality into presumably non-related study topics, usually studied
by presumably non-related disciplines. Scenarios, as other policy tools, contribute to apprehend in a
unified framework, bio-physical, economic as well as social, cultural, institutional and value aspects(Swart et al, 2004, p.142) and to articulate knowledge from different scientific disciplines.
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Fourthly, although the dissemination of scenarios can be limited to distribute a factual description of
the scenario(s), the enhancement of the story-like character of scenarios - for instance through the
construction of narratives - is an important element of the scenario approach. It would be a more
natural way of making judgments and decisions (Korte and Chermack, 2007, p.807), a way people
are familiar with and which helps highlighting relations between events, actions and consequences.
Framing the future through narratives allows, for instance, to better spot incongruence in a chain of
reasoning (Harries, 2003, p.807), and thus facilitate the understanding of the studied system. For
quantitatively-oriented scenario exercises, it is also a way to better incorporate qualitative knowledge
(Pulver, VanDeveer, 2007, p.2): "The scenario narrative gives voice to important qualitative factors
shaping development such as values, behaviours, and institutions, providing a broader perspective
than is possible from mathematical modelling alone" (Raskin et al, 2005, p.40). Beyond, scenario
stories have the ability to transmit both rational and creative layers of thoughts and beliefs"
(Rasmussen, 2005, p.230) and can constitute a bridge between the analytical dimension of a scenario
exercises and the unconscious emotional and learning mechanisms, which relate scenarios to the
narrative categories of myths, tales (Mermet, 2003, p.34) and utopias (van der Helm, 2009).
A final, fifth, characteristic translates scenarios as a synthesis rendering interrelated information in an
accessible form. Scenarios can in general terms be seen as communication tools and further are
claimed to ease communication with non-scientific audiences (Swart, 2004, p.141). Beyond the
mere informational source-receptor perspective, scenario exercises can thus also be understood as
dialogue interfaces, between scientific disciplines, but also between science and policy (van den
Hove, 2007), and beyond (see among others, Guimaraes Pereira and Funtowicz, 2003).
Those five building blocks should not be confused with the phases of a construction method, but are
rather approaches and perspectives which can be mobilized with different intensities throughout a
scenario exercise. They juxtapose and interlink to reinforce each other, and influence thecharacteristics of the exercise and, hence, of the results.
Indeed, also in terms of effects and uses, the fuzziness of the scenario field infers different
expectations and results according to the developers, the users, the issue, the scope, etc. Within this
theoretical framework of building blocks, the many different uses identified for scenarios (e.g. better
understanding, awareness raising, fostering debate or anticipation capacity and participatory vision
building) can be bundled in two more general categories: scenarios as strategizing tool and, scenarios
as learning tool. Scenarios contribute to strategizing and planning activities, and on the second hand
facilitate processes of challenging mental models and learning. According to the typology of
information use, strategizing expects an instrumental type of information use, i.e. there is a direct link
between the results of the scenarios (content and/or process) and the policy outcome of a decision
making process. Learning is then closer related to a conceptual type of use, or use for enlightenment,
i.e. scenarios influence a users understanding of a problem or situation, even if the scenario
information is not used to base decisions in a direct way (Hezri, 2006, pp.134-137), along the lines of
"decision-makers [] often found themselves influenced in more subtle ways in the longer term"
(Weiss, 2005).
Scenarios, as future-oriented tools, allow to work in a relatively open and ideally reflexive perspective,
hence providing the conditions to foster learning. On the one hand, a scenario exercise can act as a
simulator which enables to virtually experiment with situations, actions and their consequences and to
learn from it (Korte, Chermack, 2007, p.652). On the other hand, solid scenario exercises highlight the
multiplicity of perspectives and the diversity of their underlying values, and so doing they cancontribute to challenge mental models (Connor, Dovers, 2002, p.7), i.e. questioning the underlying set
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of beliefs, assumptions and norms which guide our judgment and perception of the world. Such
learning processes are usually disaggregated in different types (Brown et al 2003). Scenario exercises
can fosterfirst order learning, i.e. getting to know new facts and thus improve our mastering of causal
logics. On the other hand, scenarios can generate higher order learning which "concerns new insights
at a higher level with regard to problem definitions, norms, values, goals and convictions of actors,
and approaches how to solve the problem" (Quist, 2007, p.44). In other words, higher-order learning
is learning with regard to the way one interprets reality (i.e. a change of our mental model) and how
causal and normative logics relate. This type of change in the core thinking framework of individuals
and organizations can be generated through highlighting and challenging underlying values,
assumptions and representations, and potentially lead people to rethink the way they define (policy)
problems, as well as their solutions and concrete approaches (see also Hall, 1993). Higher order
learning also includes congruent learning, i.e. the fact that people participating in such a scenario
exercise will share something in common beyond the common experience, i.e. a shared understanding
of the issue at hand as well as the collectively elaborated results. Scenarios can be seen as boundary
objects or spheres of co-production, linking different epistemic communities and creating a locus
where they can collaborate and co-exist (Pulver and VanDeveer, 2007, p.4).
Beyond learning, the scenario literature stresses more particularly the interest for scenario construction
to the elaboration of strategies or plans2. According to Van der Heijden, the first objective of
scenario-based planning is to generate decisions which are robust under a variety of alternative
futures (Van der Heijden, 2005, p.5). Scenarios indeed can generate strategic information across
various configurations: (1) explorative external scenario exercises explore potential transformations
of the contextual environment and contribute to the elaboration of robust and adaptive strategies across
the rapidly changing contexts; (2) What if... scenarios provide the opportunity to simul ate and
explore the impacts of a specific policy; and (3) so called normative scenarios help to generate
vision(s) of the future and explore potential pathways towards pre-determined objectives.
However, if in most of the scenario literature this link between scenarios and policy making seems tobe straightforward, the practice does not necessarily confirm such a very pure strategic reading.
Scenario outcomes seem not to feed decision or planning process in a direct way. Information use
literature acknowledges that "pure instrumental use is not common. Most studies are not used as the
direct basis for decisions. [And] expectations for immediate and direct influence on policy and
program are often frustrated" (Weiss et al, 2005, p.13).
The absence of direct use within strategy-development is related to various factors3. Among those,
there is the problematic junction between the two processes into a common, hypothetical decision
cycle. There is a gap between the future-oriented process and the decision-making process in terms of
(1) modes of thinking the future (virtual/actual), (2) temporal horizon (long /short term) and (3) in
terms of actors (experts or stakeholders/policy deciders)4. In fact, these three points can be related to
the generic differences between the scenario developers and the scenario users which pertain generally
to very different epistemological communities (e.g. science, policy, civil society, administration)
and logically hold different values, objectives and norms.
The effective use of a scenario exercise to feed an actual strategy or plan can be related to the level of
credibility, legitimacy and salience of the exercise from the point of view of the potential users (Cash
2Bood and Postma, 1997; Van der Hijden, 1997; Burt and Van der Hijden, 2003; Mietzner and Reger, 2005;
Korte and Chermack, 2007etc.3 see also the Part II on Factors of success in the working paper Mutombo and Bauler, Investigating the functions
and utilization of scenarios, 2008.4See the results of a previous research on participative foresight methodologies (Mutombo, Bauler, Wallenborn,
2007)
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et al, 2002; Mutombo, Bauler 2008, Annex 3). Ultimately, the effective use of scenarios is a question
of ownership of the exercise (and its results) by the intended users. This has been widely translated
into a call for the direct implication of the potential users in the scenario exercise (Hulme and Dessai,
2007, p.21; Parson et al, 2007, p.88; Pulver and VanDeveer, 2007, p.3). The direct involvement of the
user, at least at the beginning and end of the process should foster the salience of the exercise, and
generate the necessary ownership. Obviously, involvement of the potential users is also important
because the learning outcomes of the scenario exercises are generated during the scenario process as
such, rather than merely by the final product.
3. SCENARIOS: BETWEEN SIMPLIFICATION AND COMPLEXIFICATION
Following the study of the scenario field in terms of content, methodology and particularly in terms of
uses, this section highlights the conclusions to be reminded with regard to the potential of scenario
exercises, particularly in a SD-policy context.
Scenarios, and particularly some explorative highly quantified and model-based exercises, aresometimes presented as if producing new knowledge as such (Wiek, 2006, p.751). A more realistic
point of view is that scenario exercises help taking into account and thinking in terms of uncertainties,
decision points, potential wild cards, etc. and so doing produce a learning sequence in the way of
thinking, i.e. higher order learning. An important element of the potential of scenarios with regard to
factual learning rather relies on their capacity to become dialogue interfaces, which leads for
instance scientists from different disciplines to meet and exchange. Scenarios become thus potentially
important learning tools, also because they function as knowledge networking tool (within and
beyond the scientific communities).
Furthermore, the association of the targeted users should be planned carefully when defining the
objective and design of the scenario construction process. If the main objective of an exercise is tofeed a decision process, deciders will have to be associated to the exercise so to enable them to
experience learning and to raise their level of ownership on the results. The call for associating users
to the exercises is also linked to the fact that the question remains unanswered of what the influence of
a finalized scenario product on recipient-users (users who did not participate to the process) could be;
as a consequence one is tempted to question the use of scenarios as wider exercises of awareness
raising or vision building when the scenario exercises target an unfocused group of stakeholders or
the population at large. In such cases, the eventual impact chain of the scenarios relies heavily on the
diffusion interface (e.g. the narrative, the oral presentation, the dissemination, etc).
Finally, if it is admitted that sustainability will require learning processes and changes in the way of
thinking, learning is a condition of change and not a guarantee (Quist, 2007, p.43/45). Beyond
experience of life, there are different pathways towards change, from soft information-oriented to
more coercive ones. If attitude and ideas can guide behaviours, the contrary is also true.
One of the research questions of Consentsus investigates the outcomes and uses of scenario exercises.
Scenario developers are often strikingly vague on that topic. Even if it can sound trivial (see among
others Burt and Van der Hijden, 2003, pp.1016-1020), the non-clarity of the objectives of scenario
exercises is frequent and appears to be an important cause of project failure. Many scenario exercises
are not given preciseobjectives; vague mottos are surprisingly present in reports such as identifying
trends, challenges, needs, wishes. Simultaneously, these objectives are not shared, entailing
sometimes that sponsors, developers and participants seem to have different perspectives on the mainobjectives. Furthermore, scenario exercises are even less often developing action-orientedobjectives,
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i.e. identifying windows of opportunities for policy change. Most exercises are aiming at learning
without pre-determined opportunity for (policy) action, for instance through exploring potential
impacts on ecosystems, or calculating the energetic capacity of alternative scenarios, or even (in the
case of Consentsus) through exploring the scenario approach as such.
In fact, so far, scenarios have been assessed in terms of content or methodological credibility.
However, the question of scenario evaluation in terms of effects (i.e. influence of the produced
outputs) and uses is a relatively new topic of research (see Pulver and VanDeveer, 2007), particularly
when it comes to their influence on decision making (Sondeijker, 2006, p.23). This is partly due to the
fuzziness of the scenario field in terms of schools, approaches, context, actors, and moreover, to the
just mentioned lack of clarity of the targeted purposes. More generically this situation is due to the
general problem, in terms of information use, to trace back causal links between the information
source and its influence on decision processes, as this influence is generally very indirect entailing
conceptual use instead of instrumental (direct) use. This situation of fuzziness implies that evaluation
should be an effective phase of scenario exercises, and be designed in function of the targeted
objective. Definition of clear, shared, and potentially action-oriented objectives is thus a key phase ofthe exercise. More generally, scenario exercises should not be conceived as an end in themselves but
as part of a wider project. Scenario exercises should be one step within an iterative process from
future-oriented thinking to actual decision taking and implementation, to monitoring and evaluation of
the measures, and back again to opening up reflexive thinking... This type of iterative process can be
related to the theory of reflexive governance which will be investigated in the second phase of the
Consentsus project.
*
Public decision making implies antagonistic needs for simplification and complexification (Bauler,
2007, p.70). Decision-makers need access to a rather complete set of information, highlighting the
complexity of the issue at hand - as much in terms of knowledge as in terms of scientific and
normative controversies - and at the same time, they need a clear, understandable, and by definition,
simplified, overview of this reality. From this point of view, scenarios are an interesting policy tool as
scenario construction aims at elaborating images of reality, necessarily simplified, while highlighting
the complexity of the issue in terms of uncertainties and ambivalence through exposing the
multiplicity of the possible on a specific issue.
In some discourses on scenarios, the underlying idea was to orient scenarios towards diminishing
uncertainties. Scenarios on the contrary, reveal uncertainties linked to the irremediably partial
knowledge of complex systems with and within which we are living and interacting. Scenarios
highlight uncertainties through the multiplicity of possible images and pathways. So doing theycontribute to enhance knowledge on ecological and social systems, not so much through diminishing
uncertainties, but in preparing minds not to think anymore in terms of certainties.
On the other hand, scenarios, through highlighting the multiplicity of the possible and through
questioning perspectives and the underlying values and assumptions, contribute to reintegrate the
normative dimension within political decision-making, which tends to rely on the generation of
scientific truth before taking action (or not).
From these statements, it occurs that scenarios can help to construct a distance with a modernist
perspective which denies uncertainties and the ambivalence of objectives. Scenarios contribute to a
transition towards a non-modernist perspective of decision-making, claimed to be a necessary step
when addressing the challenges of the current unsustainable development (Beck, 2006).
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B. ADDRESSING SUSTAINABLE CONSUMPTION
The issue of sustainable consumption patterns remains a very complex problem where the abstract
concepts of need, wellbeing and future generations are theoretically connected yet insufficiently
understood. The bottom-line to sustainable consumption seems however amazingly simple: finding a
good balance between human needs and available resources. However, when putting this
straightforward idea of balancing needs and resources into the realms of practice, reality clearly shows
that it is a largely unmet challenge. While consumption patterns are exponentially increasing in some
of the economically developing countries, western countries might well generate themselves a
slower pace of increased consumption, but in turn are confronted with a confusing stagnation of their
levels of happiness or life satisfaction (Inglehart, 2000).
Part of the complexity of sustainable consumption is directly linked to the definition of consumption.
Generally speaking two different strands can be discerned. The first strand dominantly5
links
consumption to the purchase of goods and services. Although this delineation limits consumption to a
very specific commercial act it does give a clear entrance point to investigate and/or assess the relationbetween consumer behavior and the use of natural resources. To give an example, Spaargaren, uses
the concept of consumption junction to speak about the exchange gate of consumption and
production (shops, markets, farm, etc.). This junction can be seen as the ideal place to develop what he
calls environmental heuristics, i.e. the use of easy rules (of thumb) in daily behavior, automatically
leading to more socially and environmentally sound way of living (Spaargaren, 2007).
The second strand broadens the what of consumption to a wider socio-economic context , i.e. it holds
that also the use-value and service efficiency of the products, after and disconnected from the purchase
phase, needs to be considered. The question is posed whether consumption also encompasses non-
commodities such as home-made goods and non-commercial services. This process of opening up the
conceptual understanding of consumption to a broader socio-cultural field results in a more
comprehensive picture of what consumer behavior is (and consequently, what needs to be changed),
but at the same time poses more methodological challenges. Here, there is not such a clear entrance
point or junction in order to determine how behavior needs to change in terms of resource -use. There
are several reasons why it is not straightforward to address consumption in this broader sense.
One problem here is related to the use of concepts such as Wellbeing and Quality of Life which
are, either implicitly or explicitly, pre-supposed in almost any discussion or article on sustainable
consumption. This implies considering consumption not as an end in itself but as a way to fulfill
needs, and further to foster physical, psychical and relational well being.
However, such concepts as Wellbeing and Quality of Life refer to aspects which are partly
subjective and complex to be measured or understood. Kang and James (2007) point out the
insufficient conceptualization and slow progress on the evolution of these constructs to properlyunderstand societal orientation. Regardless of intensive research efforts in economics, sociology and
anthropology there remain lacunas in the answer to the question of what constitutes consumer and
societal well-being, or how to enhance (or preserve) that well-being (Kang & James, p.5). This
suggests that what is generally measured is insufficiently precise to link the theoretical assumptions
with empirical observations.
A second serious impediment when addressing the broad view of consumption is linked to language
and ontology. As a consequence of words and terminology not being value-neutral, the definition of
consumption cannot be either. Frankfurter and McGoun (1999) (in their article on the ideology and
theory of financial economics) describe it as follows: As they embody our beliefs, words are not
5Dominantly, because in this strand one often also considers the use of goods and services, but merely in
function of a purchase.
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neutral. They have both connotative and denotative meanings that are value-laden. To use an existing
word to describe a new phenomenon means attaching to the phenomenon all the meanings and images
associated with that wordnot only those that seem to apply (which where those that caused the word
to be chosen in the first place), but also those that may not We choose one word over another
because our values predispose us to prefer its meanings and images (Frankfurter and McGoun,
p163). Acknowledging this, could involve a differentiated interpretation of some aspects of
consumption.
Warde (2005) argues in the sense that it is always the specific instance of the practice (eating,
clothing, doing sports, music etc.) that should be under consideration not the act of consuming; except
when the practice itself is the very act of consuming, like shopping as entertainment. The nature and
dynamics of the relationship between needs and resource-intensive behavior is not at all the same
in all societal domains or practices of consumption. The word doesnt stretch out in the same way.
Boulanger (2008) arguments that every practice of consumption should not necessarily be dealt with in
the same terms or with the same conceptual apparatus. As a consequence, for instance, it could be
maintained that the mobility practice of an individual (consumer) is of a different nature than his food
practice. Such different societal functions are characterized by different functionings, types of rules,producer networks, behavior, etc. This induces to conclude that the actual content of what
consumption is and who consumers are, through these different practices (i.e. consumer domains), is
heterogeneous to such an extent that general solutions might not be transferable from one practice (or
domain) to another.
As a consequence, Consentsus focuses on more specific practices. Four proposals for specific
consumer domains were initially considered (food, tourism, play and toys, music) and evaluated
against a series of criteria (available literature and information, importance in terms of environmental
impacts or economic weight, expertise existing on Belgian level, interest of team members ). The
practice of food consumption was finally chosen (Boulanger, 2008 Annex 2).
Criteria for the sustainability of food systems are heterogeneous. Most definitions mention threedimensions of sustainability: social sustainability (i.e. people issues, such as health, food safety,
quality of life, hunger), environmental sustainability (i.e. land use, energy use and emissions, soil
pollution) and economic sustainability (i.e. viability of agricultural and distribution sectors,
accessibility of food, inequalities in food consumption). One cannot speak about food sustainability
without evoking a sustainable agriculture (a way of producing / raising food that is healthy for
consumers and animals, does not harm the environment, is humane for workers, respects animals,
provides fair wages to farmers and supports and enhances rural communities), and sustainable
nutrition, as defined through the following aspects: enjoyable and easily digestible foods, preferably
plant-based foods, preferably minimally processed foods, organically produced foods, regional and
seasonal products, ecologically packed and tastefully prepared foods, and fair-trade products.
A working definition of sustainable food consumption could thus mean to guarantee access and use by
all present and future generations of the food necessary for an active, healthy life, through means that
are economically, socially and environmentally sustainable This type of definition remains of
course vague, particularly when it comes to its implications for policy-making. One central objective
of Consentsus is to further investigate, detail and structure this explicitly normative concept through
scenario construction.
*
The next section of the report presents the methodology and different steps of the scenario
construction. Subsequently the phases of analysis are synthesized, aiming to draw conclusions in termsof sustainable food consumption.
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II.SCENARIOS FOR SUSTAINABLE CONSUMPTION:CONSENTSUS METHODOLOGY AND RESULTS.
The exploration of the fields of scenarios and consumption was aiming at providing the necessaryknowledge for the elaboration of an effective scenario exercise on consumption. The next section
presents the scenario methodology followed, divided in two phases: the scenario construction as such
(II.A), describing the elaboration of three sustainable consumption scenarios, and the Q-methodology
(II.B), a statistical analysis based on the scenarios and aiming at drawing further conclusions in terms
of integration of these three scenarios.
A. FROM MAIN DISCOURSES ON SUSTAINABLE CONSUMPTION TO FOODCONSUMPTION SCENARIOS
The scenario construction methodology has been structured along the results of a literature review on
sustainable consumption and on scenario practices and theory. The former review highlighted the main
public discourses on sustainable consumption, leading, through the decomposition analysis to three
sustainable consumption strategies (II.A.1). Those three strategies have then framed the whole
scenario construction process which was operationalized within the realms of food consumption
(II.A.2), including the participative scenario workshops. Indeed, a participative process was set up in
the form of four expert workshops where the three strategies have been explored asking the question
of food consumption in 2050 if these strategies were to be followed (II.A.3). Based on the
brainstormed ideas, the corpus of ideas has then been worked out into three scenario narratives. An
overview of the three scenarios through presenting its diverse components is sketched (II.A.4) as well
as their analysis in terms of consumer perspectives (II.A.5).
1. DECOMPOSITION ANALYSIS TO FRAME SUSTAINABLE CONSUMPTION STRATEGIES
One of the main objectives of the consumption-oriented strands of the research was to synthesize the
(abundant) literature on consumption from different social sciences (sociology, economics, anthropology,
psychology, marketing research) into a workable scheme enabling the design of a relevant and consistent
set of alternative scenarios. The challenge was to translate theoretical accounts on sustainable
consumption into a practical structure for scenario design. This has been solved through the use of
Decomposition Analysis. The method allows deducing three interrelated parameters (i.e. macro-
economic identities) that encompass the construct of sustainable consumption. Decomposition
Analysis was initially introduced by Kaya in 1989 in the context of climate change and has recentlybeen used in scenario for carbon reduction (Agnolucci, et al., 2007).
In a decomposition analysis a problem (here, sustainable consumption) is split up in various
significant (sub)ratios. This somewhat formal approach starts from the basic assumption that
sustainability can be measured by an indicator of productivity of valuable resources (or of material
efficiency) in the well-being production process. This can be expressed in the following formula:
S = WB /EF (1)
Where:
S: Sustainability
WB: the level of well-being;
EFit = the environmental load or ecological footprint.
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The formula is not to be considered as an equation with calculable and interdependent ratios but rather
as a meaningful way to formalize a construct and hence to think about its internal causal relationships,
hence allowing to organize any discussions on the issues at stake (Agnolucci, et.al., 2007).
We propose to decompose formula (1) in:
S= (WB/C) * (C/EF) (2)
Where C = Commodities. Thus (WB/C) refers to the productivity of commodities in terms of well-
being and (C/EF) to the intensity of commodities in natural resources.
Formula (2) shows that sustainability can be improved by increasing (WB/C), by increasing (C/EF) or
both, or, putting things the other way round, by decreasing the intensity6
in commodities of well-
being, by decreasing the intensity in resources of commodities or both.
Things can be disaggregated further. The term (WB/C) can be expressed as:
(WB/Se) * (Se/C)
Se refers to the notion of service as used by Nrgrd (2006 - like in the context of energy and not as
used in the national accounting context). Indeed, what matters for the energy consumer is not energy
as such (Kw/h) but the lighting, mechanical power, etc. brought by energy. Likewise, what matters for
the user of a TV-set is not the TV-set as a thing but the services it provides in terms of TV-programs,
etc. One way to define the notion of service in a need-satisfier framework advocated by Max-Neef
(1992) is to define it as the interface between the satisfier and the need or as the satisfying virtue of
the satisfier. WB/Se stands for the productivity of the services in terms of well-being and (Se/C) for
consumption efficiency, the productivity of commodities in producing services. The full formulathen becomes:
S= (WB/Se) * (Se/C) * (C/EF) (3)
This formula highlights three discourses on sustainable consumption: each of the three ratios
represents a pure strategy to enhance sustainability (for more information see Boulanger, 2008,
Annex 2). The word strategy must be considered as referring to both (1) the framing of the objective
to be reached (i.e. the ratio of the decomposition analysis) as well as (2) indications on the way it
could be reached (i.e. the corpus of structured ideas). The strategies must rather be seen as structured
reflections on general guiding principles rather than as a corpus of ready-made or concrete policy
options.
ECO-EFFICIENCY EE (C/EF)
The eco-efficiency strategy aims at increasing the C/EF ratio by decreasing EF, i.e. decreasing directly
the intensity in materials (including the non-renewable sources of energy) of the production, use and
disposal of commodities. This strategy captures the core of the ecological modernization strand,
putting forward mottos like Factor 4 (i.e. a 75% reduction in natural resources uses) and is also linked
to the discourses of Industrial Ecology or the Cradle-to-Cradle movement.
6The intensity in resource R of a production P is the inverse of the productivity of the resource R in productionP. In others words, productivity is measured by the ratio P/R and intensity by the ratio R/P. The more
productivity, the less intensity and vice versa.
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DE-COMMMODIFICATION DC (SE/C)
The second strategy aims at increasing the ratio Se/C by decreasing C. This ratio has been labelled the
De-commoditizationstrategy. This strategy aims at reversing the commoditization p rocess described
by Manno (2002, p.70) as the tendency to preferentially develop things most suited to functioning ascommodities things with qualities that facilitates buying and selling as the answer to each and
every type of human want and need. De-commoditization implies a decoupling of the functions
provided by commodities from market-based demand, limiting as a consequence the influence of
markets and increasing the influence of other function providing systems or organisations through
which needs and aspirations can be satisfied too. That is, other modes of provision , heaving over
responsibility and management to other societal instances than the markets, i.e. public, communal or
domestic agencies.
SUFFICIENCYS (WB/SE)
This strategy aims at increasing the WB/Se ratio formally by decreasing Se while maintaining or
increasing the generated WB. This amounts to partly disconnecting well-being from the services of
commodities, i.e. in simplified terms, delinking the product functions from the wellbeing they
generate. This ratio could be called the strategy of cultural de-materialization of needs satisfaction, or in
simplified terms, the Sufficiency strategy, which is partly captured in the adage Less is more. This
strategy is highly complex because it entails, as a consequence of a complexification of the
understanding of wellbeing, a subjective and an objective factor at the same time7. Additionally it has
a definite normative or moral dimension because the principle of sufficiency involves the sphere of
private needs and wants (individual behaviour) and connects them to a larger societal objective. This
strategy is closely linked to the growing, diverse and not unified discourses related to the principle of
sufficiency, such as Voluntary Simplicity and Religious Frugality. Authors such as Galbraith (1958),
Daly (1991), Sachs (1998), Princen (2005) have urged the need to address the problem of consumersatisfaction and affluence beyond the resource-problem, and concluded in the direction of steady-state
economies or even degrowth.
These three rather theoretical discourses, or strategies, on sustainable consumption have been at the
core of the structure given to the scenario exercise. Each of them has further been explored through the
construction of a scenario illustrating what the world could potentially look like in 2050 if we were to
follow the principles of each of these discourses, also highlighting their challenges and limits. In terms
of scenario typology, the developed approach situates itself thus clearly in the realms of a normative
attempt to envision the futures of sustainable (food) consumption.
7Sufficiency can be broadly defined in two ways. One is qualitative, implying wealth and plenty; sufficiency
means that a purpose has been achieved, an need is satisified and some sort of optimal state has been reached:
enough is as good as a feast. It is subjective in nature and so normally is used in relation to an individual.
The second type of definition is quantitative, implying a clear threshold of acceptability: do we have enoughfood for the day? Is the rainfall this spring sufficient to allow the crops to harvest? (Enough is as good as afeast, sufficiency as policy, p111)
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2. FROM SUSTAINABLE CONSUMPTION STRATEGIES TO SCENARIOS
The three strategies derived from the decomposition analysis were thus used to set up a framework for
the scenario construction. Using the decomposition analysis, the Consentsus project took a
significantly original approach in the field of scenario construction. Such an approach meant that we
did not opt for a process where participants were asked to rank driving forces along grades of
uncertainty and importance in order to distil the most prominent axes of scenario differentiation.
Rather, participants were directly confronted with this structured formalisation of discourses on
sustainable consumption already implying a series of normative driving forces.
Previous applications of the decomposition analysis aimed more particularly at formulating
quantitative assumptions to reflect on carbon emissions (Agnolucci, et al., 2007): The scenarios were
generated by varying the decomposition ratios to produce different final energy demands but the same
carbon emissions. (Agnolucci et al., 2007, p7). In the Consentsus project, numerical assumptions
with regard to the ratios were not projected. Firstly, because the concepts used (EF, Wb, C, Se) do not
have identical units of measurement. Secondly, we did not lay connections between the ratios as such.We did not, for example, reflect on how a decreasing Se with relation to (a constant) Wb, effects the
eco-efficiency of commodities.
In the Consentsus approach, the connection between the ratios takes place during the phase of analysis
and comparison of the three scenarios with regard to various aspects of the food system and primarily
in terms of the three different consumption perspectives.
A BRIEF OVERVIEW OF THE SCENARIO CONSTRUCTION PROCESS:
Beyond the literature review on scenarios and consumption, the scenario construction exercise as such
took more or less one year to be completed, alternatively in the form of desktop work and of
participatory meetings and brainstorms. It started with an analysis of the food system and the
elaboration of a concise diagnosis of the current situation based on the multi-level systemic framework
stemming from System Innovation theory (Rip and Kemp, 2002). The scenario exercise itself was
designed along the three strategies. Four participative meetings were organized which required
important time investment (listing and contacting potential participants, practical arrangements of
dates, preparation of the material for each workshop). The workshops generated inputs which were
then worked out by the research team. Each strategy has been allocated to one researcher who focused
on synthesizing and creating coherence among the workshops results through drafting images of EE,
DC or S worlds in 2050. Finally narratives have been elaborated, which allowed to insert elements of
identification, e.g. daily life examples, in the previously rather descriptive and factual images.
The focal points of the scenario construction process - where the strategies have been explored andillustrated - are the participative workshops which are further presented in the next section.
SCENARIO WORKSHOPS
The three sustainable consumption strategies were used as a basis to set up a participative scenario
process. Part of the research question was whether the application of these strategies on sustainable
food consumption, would result in increased clarity on the (future) issues at stake in the food debate.
Expertise was deemed necessary in order to adequately gather a corpus of ideas with significant
quality, which led to gather for the participatory moments a sufficiently large, but operational number
of food experts originating from different food related organizations/institutions.
Concretely, four participative events have been organized (1+2+1): an introductory meeting, two non-consecutive days of facilitated workshops and a feedback meeting, with a selection of experts from the
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fields of food, consumption and sustainable development. The workshops were aiming at the
construction of drafts of scenario storylines and at collecting elements useful for the further
development of the scenarios. Based on a proposal of the research team, the participation process has
been designed with a professional facilitator, specialist of scenario workshops.
Concretely, at a very early stage, a 'contact strategy' was elaborated consisting of a set of six concise
information briefs dealing with central topics for the Consentsus project and the workshops8. The
strategy briefs structured the information given to potential participants during first contact (e.g. on
telephone), i.e. elevating them to an equal, comparable level of information on the project and the
exercise.
The objective in terms of participation was to gather approximatively ten mid-level experts at the
workshops. Having been informed of the difficulties of participation in general, and particularly in
futures studies and scenarios (see conclusions of, for example, the VISIONS Van Asselt, 2005, or
the Toolsust project Carlsson-Kanyama, 2003), we decided to gather a higher number of
participants. After first contacts, 28 positive answers had been obtained, not all of them followed the
entire sequence of workshops: 18 people did attend the first introduction dinner, 11 people attended
the 22 May 2008 workshop, 7 were present at the second 19
th
June 2008 workshop and 5 wereavailable for a later feedback meeting. While such disengagement during the participatory process
regardless of the considerable efforts given to keep active contact with all of the participants - seems
quite dramatic, and generated some frustration within the research team, literature shows that
identical projects (i.e. rather small-scale, experimental, research-oriented, without any public
mandate, voluntary) faced identical dynamics. This disengagement has also partly been foreseen, for
instance as the workshops processes were directed towards gathering a maximum of creativity -based
elements on the three strategies right at the start of the process; meetings gradually developed into
validating - formerly gathered - structured material.
a. INTRODUCTORY MEETINGAt this meeting the project team presented (1) the three strategies derived from the decomposition
analysis and (2) an analysis of the food system, i.e. a diagnosis of the current situation comprising the
major pressures to the food system. The aim of the meeting was to create a common starting point for
the further brainstorming. The meeting took place around a (slow food) dinner and served as an
opportunity for the research team to introduce the project as well as for the participants to be
introduced to each other. The informal setting created an atmosphere of familiarity as well as an
incentive for people to participate (as there was no budget to pay participants).
In the following an overview is given of the proceedings of both subsequent workshops including a
short description of the techniques which were used.
b. FIRST SCENARIO WORKSHOP ON THE 22ND OF MAY 2008This first workshop aimed through different exercises at constructing the foundations of the three
images. Concretely, participants have been divided in three groups most of the day, each one being in
charge of one strategy. With members of the Consentsus team, each group has brainstormed around
the question: What happens when great efforts and funds are devoted to the EE, DC or S strategy over
the next decennia? In smaller breakout groups, a few causal chains of ideas about this 2050 eco-
efficient, decommodified or sufficient world were gathered, then presented and explained to the rest of
the strategy-group. In order to add structure to the highly heterogeneous ideas brainstormed, a
8
The fiches introduce to the following topics: project and team, futures studies and scenarios, sustainabledevelopment and sustainable consumption, the three strategies for sustainable consumption, the three tiers
analysis framework (micro, meso, macro), as well as some problems around current food consumption.
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framework was used which divides the food
system in five instances: Produce, Obtain,
Prepare, Eat and Discard (POPED). After lunch,
the participants commented each other's work.
Then, they returned to their respective strategy-
group in order to further complement their own
image, based on the other groups comments and
through the exercise "A day out of the life of...".
c. IN BETWEEN TWO WORKSHOPSDESKTOP WORK
Between the 22 May and the 19 June 2008, the
Consentsus team has gathered and summarized
the ideas proposed by each group. Based on this
material, a first draft of images could be
developed for each strategy. A few ideas and
details were added in order to generate more
coherence and provide participants of the second
workshop with a clear overview of these different
images (Annex A). The three drafts were then
sent to the participants in advance to the second
workshop, as central working material,
addressing particularly the boundary conditions
and the internal tensions of the developed draft
images.
d. SECOND SCENARIO WORKSHOP ONTHE 19TH OF JUNE
The second workshop has been dedicated to the
further development of the three images in two
objectives: enrich the draft images and develop
their internal coherence and connect these future
worlds with their contextual conditions. Based
on the three drafts, people were divided again in
'strategy groups', and discussed specific details.
Notably, discussion went along a series of
coherence-related questions prepared by the
research team, which could be highlighted
through the first exercise aiming at collecting
reactions. Before lunch, the groups commented
each other's work through two rounds. After the
midday pause, each 'strategy group' focused on
the context and the implicit conditions to thedeveloped image with the help of the STEEP(D)
Technique GoalIn an open discussion the
question What surprised
you? what did you
miss? are asked.
General discussion to
gather the reactions of
the participants to the
images presented by the
research members.
A set of open questions
was prepared to guide adiscussion on the
coherence of the images.
Flesh out the images
and address un-tackledquestions, shed light on
intrinsic paradoxes or
trade-offs and assess
conditions of coherence.
Boundary conditions
were formulated
according to a STEEP(D)
framework:, asking the
question Which
conditions, external to the
food systems, are
necessary for this image
to be 'possible'?
Specifying landscape
elements, i.e. getting
notions on the elements
external to the food
system influencing the
conditions of the
images..
Issues at stake: the three
images were looked at
from the perspective of a
number of issues
particularly relevant forsustainable development.
Comparing the three
ratios through different
SD issues.
Table 2: 2nd Workshop 19nd June
Technique Goal
Categorizing newspaper-like
statements according to the threestrategies.
Warming-up
exercise in order toget re-acquainted
with the three
strategies.In each Strategy-groups, small
groups of 2 to 3 persons describe
possible evolutions regarding
their central challenge. Causal
diagram are sketched in order to
structure the discussion.
Generate ideas and
future elements
based on each
strategy.
POPED: The trial of causal
diagrams are presented to the
whole strategy-group andstructured on a big A0 format
poster reproducing the
categories: Produce, Obtain,
Prepare, Eat and Dispose.
Starting the
construction of a
coherent futureimage.
Rotation: People from other
groups add remarks and ideas to
the POPED structure (presented
by one member of the original
group).
Further completion
of the image.
A day in the life: An exercise
where a day in the life of aperson living in the created
image is described.
Revealing
additional, moretangible, elements
.
Table 1: 1st Workshop 22nd Ma y
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categories (Socio-cultural, technological, economic, environmental, political and demographical
contexts). Finally, the participants selected six issues they found 'relevant' to be (further) developed
(work, quality of life, equality ...). Divided in two groups, the participants have discussed the selected
issues, looking in parallel at the situation in the three images.
e. AFTER THE SCENARIO WORKSHOPS THE NARRATIVESFollowing the workshops, the Consentsus team has further worked out the images, notably by
operating certain choices, abstractions and simplifications in order